» Articles » PMID: 33994221

Placing Death and Dying: Making Place at the End of Life

Overview
Journal Soc Sci Med
Date 2021 May 17
PMID 33994221
Citations 15
Authors
Affiliations
Soon will be listed here.
Abstract

Over the last decade, policies in both the UK and many other countries have promoted the opportunity for patients at the end of life to be able to choose where to die. Central to this is the expectation that in most instances people would prefer to die at home, where they are more likely to feel most comfortable and less medicalised. In so doing, recording the preferred place of death and reducing the number of hospital deaths have become common measures of the overall quality of end of life care. We argue that as a consequence, what constitutes a desired or appropriate place is routinely defined in a very simple and static 'geographical' way, that is linked to conceptualising death as an unambiguous and discrete event that happens at a precise moment in time in a specific location. In contrast, we draw on 18 months of ethnographic fieldwork with two inner-London palliative care teams to describe the continual work staff do to make places suitable and appropriate for the processes of dying, rather than for a singular event. In this way, instead of 'place of death' merely defined in geographic terms, the palliative care staff attend to the much more dynamic relation between a patient and their location as they approach the end of their life. Central to this is an emphasis on dying as an open-ended process, and correspondingly place as a social space that reflects, and interacts with, living persons. We propose the term 'placing work' to capture these ongoing efforts as a patient's surroundings are continually altered and adjusted over time, and as a way to acknowledge this as a significant feature of the care given.

Citing Articles

Home Health Care and Place of Death in Medicare Beneficiaries With and Without Dementia.

Kim H, Duberstein P, Zafar A, Wu B, Lin H, Jarrin O Gerontologist. 2024; 64(11).

PMID: 39392304 PMC: 11469753. DOI: 10.1093/geront/gnae131.


The perceptions and experiences of community nurses and patients towards shared decision-making in the home setting: An integrative review.

Mills K, McGeagh L, Waite M, Aveyard H J Adv Nurs. 2024; 81(2):679-700.

PMID: 39039800 PMC: 11730200. DOI: 10.1111/jan.16345.


Disparities in the Place of Death for Patients With Malignant Neoplasms of the Thyroid Gland.

Anupiya F, Doshi P, Vora N, Parekh B, Soundarrajan S, Kasagga A Cureus. 2024; 16(3):e55506.

PMID: 38571857 PMC: 10990569. DOI: 10.7759/cureus.55506.


"You can't die here": an exploration of the barriers to dying-in-place for structurally vulnerable populations in an urban centre in British Columbia, Canada.

Stajduhar K, Giesbrecht M, Mollison A, Whitlock K, Burek P, Black F BMC Palliat Care. 2024; 23(1):12.

PMID: 38200482 PMC: 10782732. DOI: 10.1186/s12904-024-01340-7.


Trends and determinants of place of death among Chinese lymphoma patients: a population-based study from 2013-2021.

Ding X, Qi J, Liu W, Yin P, Wang L, Song Y Am J Cancer Res. 2023; 13(9):4246-4258.

PMID: 37818048 PMC: 10560945.